Las Vegas Review-Journal

High court nixes bid to free inmates

- By David Ferrara Las Vegas Review-journal

The Nevada Supreme Court denied a petition to free vulnerable and elderly state prisoners because of the coronaviru­s.

“Our observatio­ns are consistent with those made by other courts faced with making Covid-related decisions of this character and magnitude,” Chief Justice Kristina Pickering wrote in a unanimous decision, citing decisions in Kansas and Washington.

Lawyers for Gregory Kerkorian, a 74-year-old man behind bars on animal cruelty charges, and others had asked that the high court, Gov. Steve Sisolak and Attorney General Aaron

Ford facilitate the release of inmates susceptibl­e to COVID-19, saying that doing so could mitigate the spread of the virus in prisons and throughout the state.

Kerkorian, whose late

uncle Kirk Kerkorian is considered one of the architects of modern Las Vegas, suffers from high blood pressure and psoriasis and is susceptibl­e to infections, his attorneys Michael Horvath and Michael Mcavoyamay­a have said.

On Friday, they told the Las Vegas Review-journal that they were “disappoint­ed” in the court’s decision and plan to ask a judge in Nye County, where Kerkorian was originally charged, to modify his sentence.

Prison officials, through spokesman Scott Kelley, declined to comment on the order. At least 14 staff members, including a trainee, have tested positive for the virus, according to Kelley and a state website.

Prison director Charles Daniels has said that 39 inmates have been tested and none have tested positive. That includes nine pregnant inmates at Florence Mcclure Women’s Correction­al Center, Kelley said Friday. He added that the Department of Correction­s “has received more tests in the past weeks and we now have 547 available for testing offenders.”

Mcavoyamay­a said he may seek testimony from prison officials about testing “to see if anything they have been saying about this is true. We’ve got to get them on the record and see what’s going on in the prison system.”

The court’s ruling indicates that lawyers for prisoners could petition lower courts, the Nevada Parole

Board or the Nevada Pardons Board for a ruling on whether inmates should be released because of the pandemic.

“Kerkorian has not demonstrat­ed respondent­s (NDOC) have acted arbitraril­y or capricious­ly, or manifestly abused their discretion because he has not demonstrat­ed a constituti­onal violation (i.e., cruel and unusual punishment based on the conditions of confinemen­t or an equal protection violation),” the ruling says.

Earlier this week, the Nevada Sentencing Commission, headed by Supreme Court Justice James Hardesty, rejected recommendi­ng that Gov. Steve Sisolak move to depopulate the state’s prisons to stave off the spread of the virus.

Hardesty abstained from voting on the decision, citing the pending litigation.

Instead, the commission unanimousl­y agreed to ask Sisolak to consider speeding up the enactment of a “geriatric” parole statute, which is set to take effect July 1. Such a move would mean that about six people older than 65 in Nevada Department of Correction­s facilities, which house roughly 13,000 inmates, could have a chance at early release, prison officials said.

It was unclear whether Kerkorian would be eligible for release under the new law, his lawyers said.

Contact David Ferrara at dferrara@reviewjour­nal. com or 702-380-1039. Follow @randompoke­r on Twitter.

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Gregory Kerkorian

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